Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia (full title: Super Mario Encyclopedia: The Official Guide to the First 30 Years), also known as [Nintendo Official Guide Book] Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia 30th Anniversary 1985-2015[1] and as Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia: Nintendo Official Guide Book (Japanese: スーパーマリオブラザーズ百科: 任天堂公式ガイドブック Sūpā Mario Burazāzu Hyakka: Nintendō Kōshiki Gaido Bukku) in Japan, is an encyclopedia that was released exclusively in Japan on October 19, 2015, as part of the celebration of the 30th anniversary of Super Mario Bros.. The book covers characters, enemies, power-ups, items, stages, techniques and graphics from all 17 titles in the main Super Mario series up to Super Mario 3D World,[2] as well as developer interviews, concept art, well-known glitches, and level design explanations.[3] It contains 256 pages.

This book was supposed to be translated in English and released in North America and Europe by Dark Horse Comics on June 15, 2017,[4] although preorders for the English translation were canceled in May 2017,[5] and the release date has been moved to October 23, 2018.[6] However, the date was later modified again, this time on October 16[7]. Its German translation was released on October 12, 2017 by Tokyopop,[8] its Spanish translation was released on the October 17 by Planeta Cómic,[9] its French translation was published on the July 4, 2018 by Soleil Productions in the Soleil Manga collection,[10][11] and the Italian translation was published on November 15th, 2018 by Magazzini Salani.[12][13]

Contents

Following the release of the encyclopedia in English, it was found that one of the translators, Zack Davisson, had taken conjectural and foreign names for characters from fan websites such as the Super Mario Wiki and Mario Wikia.[14] This especially concerns enemies and characters from Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins, as well as others such as Winged Strollin' Stu (dubbed by the book by its former conjectural name used on the Super Mario Wiki, "Soarin' Stu"), and Lumacomète, which is actually the character's French name, used by the Super Mario Wiki, due to a lack of an English name.[15]

This article is under construction. Therefore, please excuse its informal appearance while it's being worked on. We hope to have it completed as soon as possible.

The English translation erroneously states that the first unmodified American release of Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels was the Wii U Virtual Console release in 2014, despite that title actually going to the earlier Wii Virtual Console release in 2007.

On the Super Mario 64 section, the Wiggler is treated as the generic enemy rather than an individual, using plural tense, and stating that they are angry when Mario stomps them. In actuality, it is a boss found at the Tiny-Huge Island.

On page 99, the Swoopin' Stu is called Gooble, a name used in Mario Golf: Toadstool Tour, which has been speculated to refer to them by the wiki from 2015 to 2019.

The pink Hisstocrat is known as "Queen Hisstocrat", which was an unsourced title from 2014 to 2019.

The description of the Bolt Beam implies that they are a type of Sentry Beam, which is remiscent of the fact that they were merged with Sentry Beam from 2010 to 2018.